Indonesian police to question Matt Lockley over Virgin disturbance

The Queensland man who sparked a hijack scare at Bali airport on Friday has denied he was drunk and claimed instead that he believed the cockpit door was the entrance to the toilet.

Plumber Matthew Christopher Lockley, 28, is in police custody in Denpasar but has been moved to hospital after prompting an incident that temporarily closed the airport as the Indonesian military initiated hijack procedures.

Lockley, who was carrying Queensland government identification, a Licence to Perform High Risk Work, and a card from the Plumbing Industry Council, caused 13 flights to be diverted or delayed from the busy airport as weekend crowds flocked in.

He has told Bali police that he was coming to Indonesia to try to find his Indonesian wife. He insists he consumed no alcohol, and had only taken four Panadol, two Voltaren and drunk two Coca Colas at Brisbane airport before boarding flight VA41 to Bali.

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Bali police spokesman Hery Wiyanto said Lockley had claimed in questioning overnight to have been asleep for most of the flight but, after being woken by the crew for a meal, came to believe he had lost his bag.

After talking to the woman in the neighbouring seat, he said the crew asked him to sit at the rear of the plane. He then decided he needed to go to the toilet.

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“He thought the cockpit was the toilet — he thought he was banging on the door to the toilet,” Mr Hery said.As the commotion prompted the pilot to issue a hijack alert, the crew grabbed Lockley and restrained him at the rear of the plane.

The alert went out at from the plane at 2.05pm local time (4.05pm AEDT), but questions remain why that alert remained active for the remaining 45 minutes of the flight.

Matthew Lockley was arrested by Indonesian Air Force soldiers after landing on the Virgin Australia 737-800 plane at Ngurah Rai airport in Denpasar. Photo: AFP

Bali airforce commander Colonel Sugiharto said on Friday that, after the hijack alert was triggered, there was no further communication with the plane.

When the Virgin flight landed at Bali’s Ngurah Rai airport at 2.50pm local time, full hijack procedures were triggered on the ground. Even on the ground, though, airport authorities say it was 30 minutes before they could establish contact with the crew.

Eventually the plane was isolated off the runway and two heavily armed hijack teams led by the Indonesian mobile brigade were sent onto the flight to extract Lockley. The airport was meanwhile closed in the midst of the Friday afternoon rush, forcing seven flights to be diverted to Surabaya, East Java, one to the neighbouring island of Lombok. Five flights were prevented from taking off.

Hijack procedure dictated that all other passengers and the plane itself should be checked for explosives or weapons.